I've found that this corral has been very useful. Having a securely fenced, hard-fenced, area is in my opinion a necessary part of every farm. Being able to keep and contain an animal securely has meant that I could sleep at night when I had a breachy cow, or when I purchased new stock from the auction, or just wanted to separate the males from the females to time the breeding.
This particular corral, after two years of use, has had a buildup of manure and chips and hay that's probably 2 to 3 feet deep in places. And the design isn't one that allows a tractor to get in to clean it out. What to do?
Enter the mini excavator. Small enough to be towed around with a pickup and get into small spaces, but big enough that you can do a lot of work with it in not much time.
Opening the gates, it drives in, and with a little bit of care you can scrape within inches of fences and gates, and lift material over and out to dump it, or scrape it all into a pile, like I'm doing in the picture below.
The material itself is pretty much composted; a few wood chips and bits of hay remain, but it's mostly just black soil after two years. I'm going to guess that there were 50 yards of dirt that I scraped out in a 6 hour excavator session -- it took longer because of the tight quarters.
I'll be cleaning ditches and digging in water lines and doing other end-of-year tasks with this little beauty. It's really pretty fun to operate. like having a bionic arm. Liking it a lot.
1 comment:
Ok so the design could be better. With the equipment you have and knowing what you know how would you design your corral if you were starting from scratch.
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